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Trial Title:
Longterm Functional Outcomes in Patients Undergoing Organ Preserving Treatment for Rectal Cancer With or Without Local Excision After Chemoradiotherapy
NCT ID:
NCT06249672
Condition:
Rectal Cancer
Conditions: Official terms:
Rectal Neoplasms
Study type:
Observational
Overall status:
Recruiting
Study design:
Time perspective:
Prospective
Intervention:
Intervention type:
Other
Intervention name:
Local excision
Description:
Organ preservation after RCT (radiochemotherapy) of rectal cancer
Arm group label:
Organ preservation after local excision
Summary:
Treatment of rectal cancer by standard neoadjuvant chemoradiotherapy protocols leads to a
complete response in about 15% of patients, or even a higher fraction if radiotherapy is
followed by an Oxaliplatin based chemotherapy as published recently.
If patient presents with a (near) complete response at the time of restaging after
neoadjuvant treatment, an organ preservation strategy can be an alternative treatment to
low anterior resection or abdominoperineal excision of the rectum. An organ preserving
strategy is an ideal option for patients that are too frail for a major oncological
resection. Furthermore, organ preservation is increasingly an option for a broader
spectrum of patients as there is growing evidence that it allows to avoid surgical risks,
including major dysfunction of the urinary, sexual and anorectal function at equivalent
oncological outcomes.
Studies investigating organ preserving rectal cancer treatment can broadly be divided
into two categories. The first option is a planned local resection of the remaining scar
at the site of the tumor after chemoradiotherapy. This can be achieved by direct
transanal resection in very low tumors or by an endoscopic procedure as TEM (transanal
endoscopic microsurgery) or TAMIS (trans-anal minimally invasive surgery). The advantage
of this approach is the resulting pathological diagnosis which can confirm the complete
response microscopically or indicate if there is remnant tumor tissue left and whether
this is completely removed. However, local resection might have an additional negative
functional impact and cumulate with function impairment from chemoradiotherapy.
Alternatively, patients after complete clinical response can directly enter a
surveillance programme without excision of the remaining scar after neoadjuvant
treatment. This strategy provides less certainty about the complete regression of the
primary tumor, but allows a treatment completely without surgical interventions and might
lead to an even better functional outcome compared to patients undergoing local excision.
There is good evidence that the influence of chemoradiotherapy on anorectal and
genitourinary function is relevant. However there is lack of good quality data how much
local excision adds to this impairment on the long run. In this study the investigator
aims to compare functional outcomes and subjective treatment satisfaction in patients
undergoing organ preserving treatment for rectal cancer with and without local resection
after chemoradiotherapy. This data will help patients and healthcare personal to choose
between these treatment options in the future, knowing the difference in functional
outcome between the groups.
As this is an observational study, there will not be any influence on treatment decisions
for the included subjects. Clinical data will be collected by questionnaires and compared
between the two cohorts, which is in line with a risk category A according to HRO (Human
Research Ordinance).
Criteria for eligibility:
Study pop:
All patients treated for rectal cancer at Bern University hospital have to be discussed
in the colorectal MDT per institutional guidelines. In order to identify all eligible
patients, MDT lists are screened weekly and all patients meeting in-/exclusion criteria
asked for consent. If consent is given, participants will be included.
Sampling method:
Non-Probability Sample
Criteria:
Inclusion Criteria:
- >18 years of age
- Informed consent
- Diagnosis of rectal cancer, <12cm from anal verge
- Treatment by chemoradiation (short course 5x5 Gy or 28x1.8 Gy with concomitant 5FU)
- Re staging with MRI/endoscopy shows (near) complete response (max 2cm tumor scar)
- Decision for treatment by organ preservation strategy (with or without local
excision)
Exclusion Criteria:
- Inability to give consent
- Follow-up not possible
Gender:
All
Minimum age:
18 Years
Maximum age:
N/A
Healthy volunteers:
No
Locations:
Facility:
Name:
Bern University Hospital, Inselspital
Address:
City:
Bern
Country:
Switzerland
Status:
Recruiting
Contact:
Last name:
Andreas Kohler, MD
Start date:
January 17, 2023
Completion date:
December 31, 2034
Lead sponsor:
Agency:
Insel Gruppe AG, University Hospital Bern
Agency class:
Other
Source:
Insel Gruppe AG, University Hospital Bern
Record processing date:
ClinicalTrials.gov processed this data on November 12, 2024
Source: ClinicalTrials.gov page:
https://clinicaltrials.gov/ct2/show/NCT06249672